Seven Ways Racism Is Built Into the System by David Swanson

1. WEALTH GAP: The playing field is not level. The median wealth of a white household in the United States is over 13 times that of a black household, and the gap is widening. Most black households have less than $350 in savings. It takes money not just to make money but to get a start, to live near good schools, to live free of lead paint poisoning, or to address the special needs that every person has.

2. EDUCATION: Black students are three times as likely as whites to attend schools where fewer than 60 percent of the teachers meet all the state certification and licensure requirements. This is a crude measurement of how some of our schools are even worse than others, but it’s a good one. Such a situation is driven by the disparity in wealth noted above, by segregation, and by racist attitudes that accept it.

3. JOBS: The employment game is rigged. Identical resumes and job applications result in 50% fewer calls from employers when the applicant’s name sounds black. Whether those choices are conscious or intentional or thought through is not terribly relevant. This sort of experiment has been run numerous times with the same result. An African-American trying to find a job must face all the usual hurdles, plus possible hurdles created by wealth disparity (such as lack of transportation, lack of prior friendship with insiders, lack of education), plus the racism of many people who read and consider resumes. As a result, the unemployment rate for blacks is twice as high as for whites.

4. COSTS: Banks both fail to make the same number of fair loans in predominantly black neighborhoods and concentrate predatory loans that unfairly strip the borrower of equity in those same neighborhoods. Blacks are charged prices roughly $700 higher than white people when buying cars. Not only is it very expensive to be poor, not only has poverty been criminalized so that people are ending up in jail for the inability to pay a bill or a fine or a traffic ticket, but racism tends to exacerbate all of these problems if you’re black. One of many ways it does this is by making you more likely to be given a fine or a ticket in the first place.

5. POLICING: Punishment is disproportionate. African American students are more likely to be punished harshly — with suspension or arrest — than whites. Black drivers are twice as likely to be pulled over by police, and three times as likely to be searched during a stop. Blacks are four times as likely to experience the use of force during an encounter with police, and black male teens are 21 times more likely to be killed by police. The police have been militarized especially in black neighborhoods, and the military training appears to have a significant impact. The provision of weapons of war to police has accelerated under both Bush and Obama. Here’s one way to push back.

6. WAR ON DRUGS: Blacks do not use more drugs than whites but are far more likely to be arrested, more likely if arrested to be prosecuted, more likely if prosecuted to be prosecuted for a felony, and more likely if convicted to be given a harsh sentence. African Americans are imprisoned at six times the rate of whites. Upon release, the “felon” label further slants the uneven field. Of course we need to end mass incarceration entirely. The point here is just that it has a racist impact.

7. MEDIA: The U.S. media subtly promotes racism through what it includes, what it excludes, and whom it chooses to treat as a human and whom as a monster. Of course, no one has to believe what their television says, but everyone must engage in constant re-education to correct for it.

So totally concur Cara…just listen to the powerful Chris Hedges interviews with Eddie Conway and Ojore Lutalo on The Real News/teleSur ‘Days of Revolt.’

But what troubles me deeply is the absence of original indigenous folk in the public imagination. They are simply erased or caricatured into impotence. I mean, how often do we witness First Nations peoples protesting in public, or rather, even permitted a strong voice in public? It’s a very rare occurrence.

I believe we should all be listening far more attentively to Owe Aku “Bring Back the Way” Sacred Water Protection…Moccasins on the Ground and Idle No More. Renewal in America has to begin with a fundamental recognition of the ancient spiritual roots.

Not only blacks are excluded from a level playing field also are the economic compromised individuals, who ever they are, one time you could see a bank manager and if they were convinced you could repay a loan you would be OK, these days the banks are set up for the rich to become richer.
Today in Australia, Britain, and America, and Israel, these countries in particular are set up to serve the rich, for the rich and by the rich, whether they are left wing or right, are overall the same party, I suggest Owen Jones of Britain is not the same deal, these individuals are motivated by a common good and conscience, this is not the policy of those in government today or the past, wars and destruction and high taxation for the many are all part and parcel of the elite, individuals such as Owen Jones are a different mind set will become casualties through road accidents or with the courtesy and assistance of MI5, CIA, or Mossad, will be falsely accused of crimes if this is not enough to establish and maintain the establishment, the polls will be fixed.

The thing is dw, even if it were plausible for someone like Bill Gates to deliver real social benefits, the problem is, by the time any of these lucre-loving dollar-bots emerge out the top of their capitalist midden….they are so mesmerised & brainwashed by the inane ideological lunacies necessarily contrived to justify their ascent through the extortionate filth of the ages, that…they can no longer retain that innately sacred (god-given) spiritual capacity to think or function like an authentic human being.

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